Nothing in this blog can be believed. If you think that anything in this blog is true or factual, you'll need to verify it from another source. Do you understand? No? Then read it again, and repeat this process, until you understand that you cannot sue me for anything you read here. Also, having been sucked into taking part in the mass-murder of more than 3 million Vietnamese people on behalf of U.S. Big Business "interests", I'm as mad as a cut snake (and broke) so it might be a bit silly to try to sue me anyway...

Monday, April 18, 2011

Fighting against imperialism...

Out there in the murky mists of the blogosphere, a blogger who shall remain nameless said:

"(My father) died defending Australia against 'imperialism' in 1945."

But Australia was already very much usurped by an empire. The British Empire. And it had no problem with that whatsoever.

And subsequently, by the early fifties, White Orstraya, feeling decidedly paranoid now that the British Empire it had been sucking up to was crumbling, quickly ducked in behind the apron strings of the White Supremacist American Empire.

Phew... Our whiteness was looking safe once more...

So you see, his father died trying to defend a racist, white supremacist empire against the imperial manouverings of a racist "yellow" empire. We only resisted because of race and our own imperial imperatives (which were very much race-based anyway.) It was all about asserting or defending race-based empires.

Mind you, at the time it was what one did. And if you were "our mob", it was a very pukka thing to do.

But the writing was already on the wall, so to speak. Joseph Rudyard Kipling, writer, poet, and noted celebrator of British imperialism, wrote, after his son's death in WWI, "If any question why we died, tell them, because our fathers lied."

* * *
Postscript: It's clear from emails I have received that I need to clarify what I'm on about here. My aim was to highlight the hypocrisy of an empire which, in the longer view of history, had no qualms about invading a whole swag of countries and committing all manner of atrocities, suddenly gets all self-righteous when it finds itself on the receiving end of similar dynamics.

4 Comments:

Blogger phil said...

Ah yes, Kipling. The most misunderstood phrase in our history, even moreso than "the Lucky Country." You and my old man would have got on extremely well, Gerry. The mindless repetition of Lest We Forget, without the slighest inkling of what Kipling was really saying, used to anger him beyond belief.

April 21, 2011 8:42 PM  
Blogger The Editor said...

Your old man must have been wise, Phil. ;-)

April 22, 2011 11:42 AM  
Blogger phil said...

He'd figured it out...

April 22, 2011 6:22 PM  
Blogger The Editor said...

I wish a few more would. :-(

April 22, 2011 7:42 PM  

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